Category Archives: World Opinion

Girl from Sangam city grabs headlines in US

Allahabad :

A girl born in Allahabad and now studying at the University of California, Berkeley, has made the city proud by winning the ‘price money question’ of $ 64000 (approx Rs 38 lakhs) by asking former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton, “If you don’t represent women in politics in America as future president, who will?”

Daughter of an ex-faculty member of Allahabad University, Vrinda Agarwal’s family moved to Sacramento, California some time back. Vrinda, a junior studying political science at UC Berkeley, is the founder and CEO of 100 strong (onehundredstrong.org), which works to empower underprivileged high school women by providing them with mentors and leadership training.

She won the ‘price money question’ at an event called ‘Everyone’s Mind’, organized recently at the Clinton Global Initiative University conference at Arizona State University, Tempa, US. Vrinda has done her early schooling in the city.

Such was the impression of Vrinda’s priced question that former US president Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton shared the stage with her and assured her all help in future. Her question elicited a standing ovation from the jam-packed hall, Hillary Clinton’s answer reverberated across the country, grabbing front page spaces across the entire American print media and prime time news bytes on all TV channels.

Vrinda assured Hillary that she was prepared to proudly run her presidential campaign to which Clinton replied, “I appreciate the sentiment. I’m obviously thinking about all kinds of decisions.”

“There is so much inequality around the world, including America, for women which we see in public education, where women have lower graduation rates in poor areas; or in corporate America, where women earn less than men; and even in politics, in which women are significantly underrepresented,” said Vrinda, via e-mail.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Allahabad / by Rajiv Mani, TNN / May 21st, 2014

Clinton to visit Lucknow today

Former US president Bill Clinton will visit the state capital on Thursday during which he is scheduled to take part in a student interaction in a school.

Clinton will spend about two hours in Jabrauli village under Mohanlalganj tehsil of here, and is also scheduled to take part in a Clinton Foundation Health Initiative programme during which he is likely to interact with children and their mothers.

“Former US president Bill Clinton will take part in the programmes organised in a school in Jabrauli village, “district magistrate Raj Shekhar said. “Programmes have been organised in three groups.. he will interact with students of class VI to VIII besides assessing the working of self-help groups”, the DM said. The DM said that elaborate security arrangements have been made in view of the former US president’s visit.

After Jaipur mid-day meal kitchen, Clinton to visit a Jabrauli school in Lucknow today
After Jaipur mid-day meal kitchen, Clinton to visit a Jabrauli school in Lucknow today

Besides senior police officers, large number of police and PAC personnel will remain present at the programme site. Shekhar said that Clinton Foundation is working in the field of health in several districts of the country.

As part of his tour, Clinton on Wednesday served chapattis to children at a government school in Jaipur after witnessing preparation of mid-day meals for thousands of students at a kitchen run by an NGO there.

Jaipur and Lucknow are on the itinerary for Clinton as part of a visit to the Asia/Pacific during which the former US president is also scheduled to travel to Vietnam, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and Australia to take stock of the work of the Clinton Foundation and deliver remarks at the 20th International AIDS Conference in Australia.

source: http://www.ibnlive.in.com / IBN Live / Home> IBN Live> India> Uttar Pradesh / Press Trust of India / July 16th, 2014

Villagers of Jabrauli agog to meet Clinton

Lucknow :

The proposed visit of former US President Bill Clinton to Jabrauli village in Mohanlalganj tehsil of Lucknow has generated excitement, enthusiasm and hope among villagers. Police and district administration officials are going the extra mile to ensure that nothing goes wrong during the high profile visit on Thursday.

From connecting roads to the panchayat bhawan and primary and secondary schools, the village and its residents are waiting eagerly for Clinton to arrive. A labourer white washing a wall of the primary school was stopped by an official of the district administration just as he was about to swipe out a diagram showing computer and its accessories.

According to district administration officials, Clinton is expected to stay in the village for nearly 45 minutes. He is scheduled to see workers connected to the Clinton Health Access Initiative, which trains healthcare workers to treat diarrhoea, one of the largest killers of children in India.

Among others waiting anxiously for Bill Clinton are 69 members of Matsya Jeevi Sahkari Samiti Limited, Jabrauli, who formed this self-help group in 1984 and are primarily involved in fishing. Member of the self-help group Jagroop Narayan said “we will try for an audience with Bill Clinton, so that we can narrate our miseries to him and draw his attention to our plight.” He added that members of this self-help group were from Jabrauli village and hailed from the same community. Some of the varieties of fishes these members cultivate (in the pond) include Rohu, Nayan Bhakur, silver carp and grass carp.

“We have sought a pond from the government, to improve our livelihood. But, we have yet to see any success in this regard,” said 58-year-old Jagroop.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Lucknow / TNN / July 16th, 2014

Nawabi Lucknow

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Though English singing sensation Cliff Richards was born in Lucknow, the city is not famous for western compositions, but for highly refined versions of Indian performing arts. A classical music form like thumri and dance like Kathak were pioneered by the Muslim Nawabs upcountry. They built the city in 1775 as the capital of Awadh, their inde­pendent sovereignty. And that was esta­blished at a crucial time — when the command of the mighty Mughal Empire in nearby Delhi was waning, while British East India Company was transforming their interest from trade to territory.

The Nawabs flaunted a great passion for art, music and literature, which attracted the best of North India’s talent to Lucknow and that over time permeated through the growing city, giving it a distinctive culture that was both artistic and edifying. Lucknow became another name for courteous urbanity and conjured up an image of a society where adabs and tehzeebs were a way of life.

Today, like any other Indian metropolis, it is an avant-garde settlement of 3 million, but during my recent visit, it didn’t take me much time to sense the breathing of the golden legacies of the past era, despite modernity cloaking the city.

I was able to note an impeccable blend of the ancient with the contemporary, finding quaint markets gracefully coexisting with glitzy shopping malls, tall apartments rising next to stunning ancient monuments, newer cars on the road giving way to horse driven carts and old-fashioned eateries constantly throwing challenge to the kitchens of five star hotels.

The touches of this past lifestyle blazed strikingly, the moment I stepped into the atmospheric Chowk area, where during the Nawabi heyday, traders, artisans, weavers, engravers, painters, singers and nautch girls grew and flourished. A “must visit” destination for all tourists, the quarter is overburdened with liveliness and buoyancy. Winding through its narrow galis, flanked on both sides with dusty two storied houses, business establishments and countless shops, some dating back over 200 years, selling a range of merchandise from old fashioned furnishings, antique utensils, hand laced carpets, aromatic spices, to saris, ghagra’s and kurtas exquisitely embroidered with chikankari, artwork that adorned Nawabi apparel and exotic “atars” gifted to their begums, was an exhilarating experience of savouring antiquity. The classic example of ‘pahele aap’, the legendary etiquette of the city, came up several times from passing pedestrians, when going through some very narrow alleyways, where it’s difficult for two people to cross at the same time.

The experience of meandering through time continued when I visited the magnificent Qaser Bagh Palace, where the dynasty’s last Nawab, Wajed Ali Shah, a prolific poet, singer and dancer, lived till deposed by the British, when Awadh was annexed to the Company’s Empire in 1856. The silent beauty shrouding the ruined Indo- Persian styled edifice promptly shifted my mind to another time zone. Looking at the ornate balconies, I could envision that to be the place where the Nawab leisurely sat and composed verses, such as the famous ‘Babul Mora Naiha Chooto Jaay’ while the city’s magical silhouette slowly sunk into sunset. Wandering around, I thought I heard the rhythms of a tabla matched with the tunes of sarengi, and imagined that coming from a mehefill inside, the Nawab dancing and singing with his luscious courtesans, in a large hall ado­rned with gold framed mirrors, portraits of ancestors and opulent chandeliers hanging from the festooned ceiling. Walking through the surrounding grounds, once treaded on by the emperor and his friends, I didn’t see anyone flying kites or watching rooster fights, but I was told that two of the Nawab’s most favourite pastimes still evoke passionate involvement among the locals.

The opulent vestiges of the Qaser Bagh Palace  bore testament to the extravagant lifestyle  of the Lucknow Nawabs, for which they were notorious. The other building I saw that was equally appealing in style and sumptuousness was the Chatter Manzil, the name being derived from its chatter (umb­rella) shaped gild dome crowing the structure.

The highlight of any visit to Lucknow is surely cherishing  its architectural transcendence and, like me, if you arrive by train, the first taste will come the moment you step down at the Charbagh Railway station — a 1914 built imposing edifice, structured with domes and minarets and looks like a grand palace from outside. It aptly measures up in quality with the city’s other monuments, mostly built by the Nawabs that dominate the expansive physical environment spreading out on both sides of the River Gomti.

For me, the two Imambaras — Bara and Chota, came out as the most distinctive. They are religious monuments, meaning houses of the imams, as per the Shiaite school of Islam to which the Nawabs belonged.

Located in the city’s bustling old quarter, you enter the precinct through the Rumi Darwaza, a soaring gate 60 feet high that has stood imposingly for over two centuries as a silent witness to history. The stunning feature of Bara Imambara which is a maze of a large courtyard, two imposing gates and a mosque, is the 50m long and 15m high central hall, one of the largest vaulted galleries in the world, totally unsupported by pillars. An external stairway guides you to an upper floor laid out as an amazing labyrinth, known as the Bhulbhulaiya, where you are sure to lose your way in the criss-crosses of latticed corridors and stairways, unless someone is with you as a guide. The nearby Chota Imambara, a gem like structure is surrounded by a delicate golden dome and has external walls engraved with superb calligraphy. The interior is adorned with gilt-edged mirrors, ornate chandeliers, silver pulpits and colourful stucco decorations. Next to it is a clock tower, the tall brick structure of which turns into a memorable sight when brightly illuminated at night.

It is said that the Nawabs had equal fascination for poetry and food, so cuisine became and still remains a central feature of the city, serving signature dishes such as tunde kabab, kakori kabab, dum phukt mutton biriyani, nehari and halim, the recipes for which emerged from the regal kitchens. They certainly pledge to delight one’s heart through the stomach, and this worked for me when I tried some of the specialities at the plush Oudhyana Restaurant at the Taj Residency Hotel.

Elusive and enchanting, Lucknow, oozing with history and teeming with life, has all the ingredients to lure any traveller — excellent air, rail and road connections, accommodation to suit every budget, great shopping opportunities, mouth wat­ering cuisine, courteous people and above all a landscape bejewelled with some of India’s most breathtaking monuments. I fell in love with the city instantly and I am sure you will as well.

Factfile

Getting there: Lucknow is 80 km from Kanpur, 210 km from Allahabad, 305 km from Varanasi and 363 km from Agra. The Delhi-Lucknow Shatabdi Express links Lucknow to other major cities in India. Lucknow’s Amausi airport has flights to all the major cities in India. Hire an auto rickshaw or cycle rickshaw. Even horse -drawn carts are available. Please try to fix the rate before starting the journey. The main centres of activities in the city today are Gomtinagar, Hajratganj, Janpath, Aminabad, Chowk, Nakhas, Sadar and Nishatgang. Log on to www.up-tourism.com for more information.

— sandiphor@hotmail.com

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> LifeStyle> Travel / by Sandip Hor / June 22nd, 2010

CIMAP to lead certification system of medicinal plants and products

Lucknow :

The Lucknow-based Central Institute of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants, and institute under the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research has been assigned a lead role in the Indian Ocean in introducing a system of certification of medicinal plants and their products with a view to promote marketing and utilisation of value added products in Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA) region. The development comes close to the heels of another Lucknow-based CSIR laboratory, Indian Institute of Toxicology Research getting the GLP certification.

This decision to assign the current role to CIMAP was taken in the first meeting of medicinal plants focal points of IORA Regional Centre for Science and Technology Transfer (RCSTT) held at Salalah, Sultanate of Oman from June 23 to June 25. IORA is an apex organization, which includes 20 countries Australia, Bangladesh, Comoros, India, Indonesia, Iran, Kenya, Madagascar, Malaysia, Mauritius, Mozambique, Oman, Seychelles, Singapore, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Tanzania, Thailand, UAE, Yemen and 6 dialogue partners including China, Japan, Egypt, France, UK and USA.

According to the Salalah declaration adopted by the participating countries, an ad hoc committee on standards and standardisation for medicinal plants and herbal medicine has been established. The committee chaired by Prof Anil Kumar Tripathi, director of CIMAP will draft a document to introduce a system of certification of each member state in order to introduce a minimum standard acceptable to all member states for commercialisation of value added products of medicinal plants and related technology in the IORA region.

Tripathi who represented India at the meeting at Salalah said that the recommendations made in the meet would help the IORA member states and other developing countries in formulating their plans to ensure cooperation for applied research, technology transfer and commercialisation of medicinal plants and herbal medicine in the IORA region.

It was also proposed that CIMAP will host a meeting of the IORA in 2015 besides organising an international training course on the processing and quality control of medicinal and aromatic plants for the member countries at CIMAP soon.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Lucknow / by Arunav Sinha, TNN / June 28th, 2014

Lucknow school gets NGO status from UN

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Lucknow:

A city-based school chain with over 50,000 students in its various branches has been registered as an official NGO of United Nations, the school said on Saturday.
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Jagdish Gandhi, founder of the City Montessori School, told reporters that the school was registered with the department of public information of the UN as a non-governmental organisation.

This special status will give the school the privilege of “participation in various programmes, conferences and seminars organised by United Nations and put forth its ideas on world unity and world peace in order to safeguard the future of 2.4 billion children of the world”, he said.

CMS was declared the biggest school, as per student population, in the world by the Guinness World Records last year.

(Agencies)

source: http://www.post.jagran.com / Jagran Post / Home> States News / by Jagran Post News Desk / Jagran Post Editorial / June 28th, 2014

A peephole to history

What gives late 19th century photographer Raja Deen Dayal’s work the acclaim it has received? An exhibition showcasing arguably India’s first professional photographer’s works tries to dissect.

LISTENING TO THE PHONOGRAPH: DEEN DAYAL, GHALIB JUNG AND FRIENDS AT HYDERABAD 22ND MAY 1891The palpable excitement of Nawab Ghalib Jung and his friends whilelistening to the first phonograph in Hyderabad is visible. Such naturalexuberance is seldom seen in 19th century photography
LISTENING TO THE PHONOGRAPH: DEEN DAYAL, GHALIB JUNG AND FRIENDS AT HYDERABAD 22ND MAY 1891The palpable excitement of Nawab Ghalib Jung and his friends whilelistening to the first phonograph in Hyderabad is visible. Such naturalexuberance is seldom seen in 19th century photography

Lala Deen Dayal was to Indian photography what his peer Raja Ravi Varma was to painting. As a 20-something civil engineer, Deen Dayal was working at the draughtsman office at the Indore Public Works Department when he heard an ominous rumour — all draughtsmen were to be replaced by photographers. It was 1866. Dayal decided to brush up his photography skills; a subject that he had learnt during his final year in college. A decision that paved the way for Deen Dayal to eke out a successful career in professional photography.

Vikram Sampath, Executive Director of the Indira Gandhi National Centre for Arts (IGNCA), says: “The heavy Bellow cameras of the 19th century would have been cumbersome. But his photographs are so extensive that they can be the starting point for fleshing out the socio-cultural aspect of that period.” IGNCA is presenting the exhibition Raja Deen Dayal Photographs, a collection of 150 rare period photographs which will be shown in the city for the first time.

Sampath says he can imagine how hard it must have been for Deen Dayal to get people to be photographed, considering the superstitions around the act. “People believed that if photographed, their life span would be reduced.” It was not uncommon for him to break the glass-plate negative in front of the subject after giving them their photographs, probably to assure them that it wouldn’t be used again. But he would have stealthily kept another copy in the archive.
Grand old man

Here was an Indian photographer appreciated by Indian maharajas (the sixth Nizam of Hyderabad, in fact, wrote a verse in praise of him) and British Viceroys. His photographs were exhibited to great reviews in international exhibitions. He was appointed the court photographer for Hyderabad (1885); Mir Mahboob Ali Khan, the Nizam of Hyderabad, conferred on him the title Musawwir Jung Bahadur (the Bold Warrior Photographer) and referred to him as Raja Deen Dayal. In 1897, Queen Victoria granted him the Royal Warrant, which meant he could cover the Delhi Dubar (1903). He had flourishing studios in Secunderabad, Indore and Bombay that were operated by his firm Deen Dayal & Sons. And even after his death (1905), his fifth generation has photo studios in the twin cities of Hyderabad and Secunderabad. Not bad for a man who was born (1844) in a small town near Meerut.

Luck and talent

In 1870, when Deen Dayal was hired by the Archeological Survey of India, his brief was to capture 78 monuments of Central India. The technique used was refreshingly different. The monuments stood out against the sky as he captured them from a low angle, making them imposing and grand. Some, like the Gwalior Fort, had an extraordinary view of the sharp precipice below the steep path leading up to the main entrance. The portraits of the monuments form an extensive collection of places across India.

Deen Dayal quit his government job to pursue photography when he realised that the albums prepared by him on Indian monuments were a hit with the British officers returning to Britain. Sir Henry Daly appointed him the official photographer for the Prince of Wales’s tour of India in 1875. He started accompanying the Viceroys, Lord Dufferin and Lord Elgin, on their tours. His interactions with Indian royalty gave him unmatched access to their world. By being the court photographer of the Nizam, Deen Dayal secured a generous patron and an easy access to British officers in the cantonment. He was probably the first Indian photographer to have a Zanana (ladies only) studio at Hyderabad which was run by a specially-appointed employee, Kenny Levick.

From glass plates to digital

Deen Dayal’s family had preserved the glass-plate negatives with history recorded on them. Those negatives required long exposures and hours of work. Each comes with documentation of the place and year, apart from the name of the royals or nobles. The commoners were categorised broadly with captions such as ‘Maratha’ and ‘Brahmin’. IGNCA has reproduced the originals after the entire collection of about 3,000 negatives were handed to them by the family in 1989. These were then digitised and the first exhibition took place in New Delhi in 2010. For all aficionados of photography, this show remains the best place to know how it all began for one photographer, arguably the first Indian professional photographer.

Raja Deen Dayal Photographs, 10 am to 5 pm till July 20, NGMA

source: http://www.bangaloremirror.com / Bangalore Mirror / Home> Entertainment> Lounge / by Jayanthi Madhukar, Bangalore Mirror Bureau / June 23rd, 2014

IITR bags global honour for good lab practice

Lucknow :

Good Laboratory Practice (GLP) certificate awarded to Lucknow-based Indian Institute of Toxicology Research has brightened prospects of those involved in micro, small and medium-scale enterprises as also cultivators of mango and betel leaves that are exported all over the world.

IITR is the first among 37 CSIR laboratories in India to receive the coveted certificate (initially for a period of three years). Speaking to media, IITR director Dr K C Gupta said “GLP is a quality system concerned with organisational process and conditions under which pre-clinical health and environmental safety studies are planned, performed, monitored, recorded, archived and reported. The national and international regulatory authorities/agencies require the safety data of all new products including industrial chemicals, pharmaceuticals, veterinary drugs, pesticides, cosmetic products, food products, feed addictives, etc prior to their launch in the market.” He added that GLP is a system evolved by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and is used for achieving such safety goals.

Dr A B Pant said “this certification states that specified studies in toxicity and mutagenicity studies conducted at CSIR-IITR are in compliance with the principles of OECD principles for GLP.”

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Lucknow / TNN / June 27th, 2014

A ‘Taj Mahal’ in Kuwait

Taj Mahal of India is widely recognized as “the jewel of art in India and one of the universally admired masterpieces of the world’s heritage”. It’s a unique monument built by Mughal emperor Shah Jahan in memory of his wife Mumtaz Mahal. Taj Mahal is one of the Seven Wonders of the World and one of the best examples of Islamic architecture.

Millions visit India to get glimpses of this unique architectural beauty and this includes a large number from Middle East. How about seeing the beauty of Taj Mahal here itself in Kuwait?

Inspired by the architecture of Taj Mahal, Kuwait has designed a mosque exactly like Taj Mahal, a replica. The mosque is a bigger version of India’s Taj Mahal. It’s 3 times bigger.

Sadeeqa Fatimatul Zahra Mosque, a prayer place for the Kuwaitis, looks similar to India’s Taj Mahal from the outside. Located at Block 6, Abdullah Al-Mubarak area, West of Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh, the mosque is already gaining a reputation as one of Kuwait’s most distinctive buildings and is called the “Taj Mahal of Kuwait”.

It’s learned that Hassan Johar, a Member of Parliament, who was behind this unique project here, received the blessing of the Indian embassy before building the mosque.

Internal design of the mosque differs from the original. It consists of carvings of verses from the Quran. The four minarets and central dome of the mosque are adorned with brass crescents. The main prayer area is at the ground floor with library and utilities. It has a separate prayer hall for the women in the first floor. The Mosque was officially opened for the public in 2011.

The beauty of the mosque in middle of the desert is mesmerizing. It’s a proud feeling for all Indians here in Kuwait to witness a replica of the Taj Mahal in Kuwait. Those who have not seen the Taj Mahal in India, they can now see it in Kuwait.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> NRI> Contributions> Contributors / by Deepika Nambiar, TOI Contributor / April 30th, 2014